
30 Days Free Trial WordPress Hosting
We love WordPress and it’s possibilities. Bring or buy your own domain and get a WordPress website with hosting free for 30 days and then only €3.82/month.
Click here and check it out.
- How to Connect AI Agents With WordPress using MCP (Step by Step)by Nouman Yaqoob on 10/07/2026 at 12:38
AI assistants like Claude Code, Cowork, and ChatGPT are incredible productivity boosters, and if you wished that you could connect these AI tools with WordPress directly, then you’re not alone. Lately, I have been using WordPress MCP by WPVibe to let my AI assistant manage… Read More » The post How to Connect AI Agents With WordPress using MCP (Step by Step) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Secondsby Syed Balkhi on 07/07/2026 at 10:00
Ever wanted to build an AI support agent for your WordPress website or WooCommerce store? Imagine customers asking a question at 2 a.m. and getting an instant, accurate answer, pulled straight from your own help docs, website content, and custom private SOPs. Plus, it can… Read More » The post Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Seconds first appeared on WPBeginner.
- WPBeginner Turns 17 Years Old – We’re Doing a Giveaway ($10,000 in Prizes)by Syed Balkhi on 04/07/2026 at 10:08
It’s quite surreal to type that WPBeginner turns 17 years old today! I’m incredibly grateful to have the support of such an amazing community of website owners, small businesses, and web professionals. YOU are the best part of WPBeginner! Like every year, I will take… Read More » The post WPBeginner Turns 17 Years Old – We’re Doing a Giveaway ($10,000 in Prizes) first appeared on WPBeginner.
************
- AI Can Find Bugs, But Human Knowledge Still Proves Themby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 16/07/2026 at 10:10
Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing offensive security, but it has not changed the standard that matters most: a finding has to be proven before it becomes useful. AI-assisted tools can read code quickly, generate payloads, summarize attack surfaces, explain unfamiliar APIs, and run repetitive testing workflows at impressive speed. That is a real advantage for security teams. It also
- Unpatched Shark Vacuum Flaw Could Let Attackers Control Other Vacuums Region-Wideby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 16/07/2026 at 09:23
Pull the certificate off the flash of a Shark RV2320EDUS robot vacuum, and you can run root commands on other people's Shark vacuums across the same AWS region: watch the camera, drive the robot, read the map of the house, and take the Wi-Fi password in plaintext. A researcher publishing under the handle tokay0 put the method online on Monday, having tested it only against vacuums he
- OpenAI’s GPT-Red Automates Prompt Injection Testing to Harden GPT-5.6 Solby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 16/07/2026 at 08:42
OpenAI has disclosed details of GPT-Red, an internal automated red-teaming model that scales prompt injection vulnerability discovery with an aim to fix issues before the tools are deployed widely. "GPT‑Red is a strong red-teamer, and our previous models are highly vulnerable to its prompt injection attacks," the artificial intelligence (AI) company said. "We use GPT‑Red to adversarially train
- Zoom Patches Critical Windows Flaw That Could Enable Account Takeoverby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 16/07/2026 at 07:22
Zoom has released security updates for a critical security flaw impacting Zoom Workplace for Windows that could facilitate account takeover. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-53412 (CVSS score: 9.8), affects Zoom Desktop Client for Windows, Zoom VDI Client for Windows, and Zoom Meeting SDK for Windows. "Improper Input Validation in Zoom Desktop Client for Windows, Zoom VDI Client for
- TuxBot v3 Evolution Shows Signs of LLM-Assisted IoT Botnet Developmentby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 15/07/2026 at 18:43
Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a previously unreported Internet-of-Things (IoT) botnet framework dubbed TuxBot v3 Evolution that shows signs of being developed with assistance from a large language model (LLM), albeit with not so successful results. "While the AI complied with their request to generate botnet code, it included a safety disclaimer that the developer failed








